Sharon Stone suffered her own massive stroke in 2001 and spoke about her incredible recovery to Extra TV just hours after news broke that Luke Perry was in a Los Angeles hospital due to a reported stroke suffered Wednesday. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images / Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

The actress suffered her own massive stroke in 2001 and spoke about her incredible recovery to Extra TV just hours after news broke that Perry was in a Los Angeles hospital due to a reported stroke suffered Wednesday.

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“I wish him all the best, because you can come all the way back even from the edge, from the worst things. I'm here to tell you,” Stone said as she attended an event for the Women's Cancer Research Fund in Beverly Hills.

Perry was still in the hospital Friday, his spokesman said in a new statement to the Daily News.

Perry was responsive and talking when paramedics first arrived, but his condition quickly deteriorated and he was taken to the hospital and sedated, according to TMZ, the first to report on the stroke.

A family source reportedly told TMZ that Perry was placed in a medically induced coma. Perry’s rep disputed that claim.

Perry, 52, shot to international fame playing heartthrob Dylan McKay on “Beverly Hills, 90210” through the 1990s.

“My friend. Holding you tight and giving you my strength. You got this,” actress Shannen Doherty wrote in the caption to a photo showing the two hugging during their time on the teen drama.

“No words can express what my heart feels hearing today’s shocking news. Let us all say a prayer for his speedy recovery,” fellow star Ian Ziering wrote in the caption to a similar photo from their time working together.

Speaking to Extra, Stone said she also related to actress Selma Blair, who recently revealed what she went through leading up to her MS diagnosis. The actress said she was treated like a stressed-out mom rather than someone with an undiagnosed illness.

Hospitalized celebs

“It was very, very bad after I had my stroke and brain hemorrhage, and I was treated just miserably,” Stone said. “But you have to understand that all the doctors working today were educated on the male anatomy. They weren’t educated on a female anatomy, so it’s easier to say that women were crazy than say, ‘I don’t know.’”